The Habitat for Humanity volunteer Construction Crew works on two homes in North Minneapolis. These volunteers have been with Habitat for 20 plus years and have worked on countless projects in the area. “Habitat relies super heavily on their volunteers as their main labor force,” Christy said. “We have volunteers on all of our sites most days doing the home building.” | Photo by Glasha Hovey

Retirees spend free time planting seeds for the next generation

The Twin Cities chapter of Habitat for Humanity pushes through a pandemic and a social injustice movement to provide affordable housing.

Rachel Blood
ROYAL REPORT
Published in
6 min readNov 23, 2020

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By Rachel Blood and Glasha Hovey | News Reporters

Tony Beckstrom woke up at 6 a.m. Nov. 13 and noticed the 13-degree reading on the thermometer. “What am I gonna do?” he wondered, thinking of the empty lot of land on which a house needed to be built. But there was no need to worry, his regular group of volunteers, retired men who have been with Habitat for Humanity for 20 years, always show up.

“[It] is just crazy to me that that’s how they would spend their retirement time,” said Construction Volunteer Facilitator and 2020 Bethel graduate Maddie Christy, who began her work for Habitat in September. “That’s been pretty impactful for me, I think, just seeing people give up their time like that and care so much about a mission.”

Beckstrom volunteered when the Twin Cities chapter of Habitat for Humanity was formed in 1985 until becoming staff in 1990. He said no other builder in town can provide affordable housing quite like Habitat, partially due to volunteer labor and donated materials from corporations. Those savings can be passed along to clients, which resonates with the organizations that donate materials and teams to Habitat.

Habitat is scaling back operations to prevent the spread of COVID-19. Beckstrom expects a slow, quiet winter without a lot of the usual volunteer groups. Saturdays, a popular volunteer day in the winter for Habitat, often draw in church or groups or people who normally spend nicer weekends up at a cabin or doing yard work.

While the usual large groups won’t make their yearly appearance, Beckstrom does expect the regular prison crews to return. Male groups from Lino Lakes Prison and female groups from Shakopee Women’s Prison often help out.

Beckstrom’s boss suspended all volunteers aside from the group of retired men referred to as “regulars.” From a medical standpoint, their age makes them “high risk,” but Beckstrom points out that everyone around 60 has underlying health conditions.

“You don’t live this long without having something go wrong,” he said. But in his industry, it’s the younger generations that pose a higher risk due to their behavioral tendencies of going out, while older, retired generations stay home after work.

While Beckstrom and his wife, a Methods Hospital employee, believe that they had COVID-19 in February, the skeleton crew working on Habitat projects is scared. Beckstrom hopes a vaccine is around the corner that will allow operations to return to normal.

Habitat shut operations down in March for a few months before slowly reintroducing staff and volunteers to the build sites. The organization was returning to a relative normal in August and September, but is now regressing with the rise in cases.

When Beckstrom was a building inspector in the southwestern suburb of Edina, he heard there was an organization that was going to start an operation building houses with volunteers. “That’s the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard,” he thought. Then he decided to volunteer.

Thirty years, one month and 1653 houses later, Beckstrom likes to think everybody has heard of Habitat and its good reputation.

Over the course of a few hours, a ring of chairs serving as the volunteer dining room is replaced with a concrete slab as the basis of a soon-to-be home.

“Everybody comes together with a common cause trying to do the right thing, and I think that’s kept us alive and well for 35 years,” Beckstrom said.

Beckstrom primarily works on the north side of Minneapolis, in what he calls a rough neighborhood. He wonders sometimes whether Habitat and other initiatives are bailing water out of the boat faster than it’s coming in.

The recent civil unrest has been disheartening for him. One of Beckstrom’s projects on the south side was trashed during the peak of the riots. The home was close to being finished. He spent most of the summer alone or in pairs trying to repair the damage. Losing volunteers between the riots and the pandemic took away most of Habitat’s labor force.

Vandalism is nothing new to Habitat, and Beckstrom learned long ago not to take it personally. But this time was different in the midst of a social injustice movement and a pandemic.

Whenever Beckstrom drives through the north side neighborhoods of Minneapolis, he gets to see the houses his teams have built. Years ago, it didn’t seem like Habitat could have a big impact on the affordable housing situation. The scope of the issue was and still is massive.

A large part of the volunteer force consists of retirees, who often lose their identity upon retiring. Without the need to go to work, retirees want to do something meaningful and have an impact on the next generation. No construction skills are needed to learn how to help.

Habitat runs multiple programs, but ultimately has one goal: to provide access to affordable housing for all people. The Twin Cities location has about fifty houses in progress throughout the cities at any given time.

Habitat keeps a running list of eligible clients. Qualifications must be met before a home is assigned, including financial readiness, home ownership courses and possibly meeting with a loan counselor. When a family is deemed prepared and is paired with a home, they are required to make a down payment of what Habitat calls “sweat equity,” which means the adults of the family help to build either their house or another Habitat house as volunteers.

Habitat tries to meet the needs of families in desperate need of a home, like families with five kids living in an overpriced one bedroom apartment. According to Christy, some Twin Cities apartments are so overpriced that families could be paying the same price in mortgage for more space, a yard, a garage and a driveway.

Families are often selected prior to the start of house construction. Parents help build the house as part of their down payment, allowing Habitat staff and volunteers to form relationships with clients. Beckstrom still joins a family with five kids for barbecues a few years after construction.

“As I wind down in my career, I’m just very blessed that I can do this,” Beckstrom said. “To this day, I can’t believe they pay me for this.”

Tony Beckstrom, a Habitat Construction Supervisor, stands outside of two homes in North Minneapolis he and his crew have been working on for the past few months. “This is what we do. Yeah, we make mistakes. No, we don’t get it right the first time, but we eventually get it right,” Beckstrom said. “The houses turn out really nice.”

Habitat clients purchase their homes like any other homeowner, but there are nuances in the process for affordability purposes. The price of the home, mortgage and interest rates, kept low through the use of volunteers and partnerships with financial institutions, makes sure Twin Cities citizens can afford the house. Donations and fundraisers are also large contributors to the affordability of Habitat’s homes. Paint companies and large corporations frequently donate materials to Habitat as well or provide discounts when buying in bulk.

“We just build the house. They turn it into a home when they move in and hang their pictures on the wall.” — Tony Beckstrom, Habitat for Humanity Construction Supervisor

Beckstrom hopes to impact generations to come, planting seeds now for children who will grow up later.

“We just build the house,” he said. “They turn it into a home when they move in and hang their pictures on the wall.”

A man once approached Beckstrom in a Target, shook his hand and greeted him. The man proceeded to thank Beckstrom and Habitat, attributing his success in the University of Minnesota honors program to affordable housing. Beckstrom recognized him as the son of a couple whose house he worked on in 1991.

“It was always our theory that over time, it would benefit the next generation of children to have stable housing,” Beckstrom said, “but to see it come full circle was pretty special.”

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Rachel Blood
ROYAL REPORT

I'm a senior English and journalism major at Bethel University. I get excited about all sorts of fiction, authentic storytelling, and cardigans with pockets.